Voltswagen
Electrical
- Oct 28, 2003
- 4
For UL testing we need to equip our lab with a power source capable of pushing at least 24 kiloAmperes at any low voltage for nine seconds through our 500-MCM product under test, which has a typical impedance around 250 micro-ohms.
Some adjustability of output will be needed, as heating of the sample quickly reduces current going through it, and that minimum of 24 kA must be maintained for the 9-second duration.
The 9-second pulse would need to be repeated a few times in a few hours, so a 9-seconds-on, 30-minutes-off duty cycle or better is fairly important.
Are there any good places to head with this project, beyond ganging up multiple series loading transformers to a variac or several? Bosses are frantic to get started and just bought an 8 kA loading transformer on the assumption that for just 9 seconds, it can handle triple the rated input voltage.
I smell smoke already-- not just the kilobucks already spent, either-- and expect that we'll need at _least_ two more such transformers in series.
Can we feed them from one variac?
Thanks for any guidance.
--Voltswagen
('03 Civic Hybrid)
Some adjustability of output will be needed, as heating of the sample quickly reduces current going through it, and that minimum of 24 kA must be maintained for the 9-second duration.
The 9-second pulse would need to be repeated a few times in a few hours, so a 9-seconds-on, 30-minutes-off duty cycle or better is fairly important.
Are there any good places to head with this project, beyond ganging up multiple series loading transformers to a variac or several? Bosses are frantic to get started and just bought an 8 kA loading transformer on the assumption that for just 9 seconds, it can handle triple the rated input voltage.
I smell smoke already-- not just the kilobucks already spent, either-- and expect that we'll need at _least_ two more such transformers in series.
Can we feed them from one variac?
Thanks for any guidance.
--Voltswagen
('03 Civic Hybrid)